3.4 Energy dot plot parameter selection
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3.4 Energy dot plot parameter selection
The user is prompted for three parameters. The first is the ``minimum vector size for plot''. This parameter controls the clutter on the display screen. Only helical regions that contain at least this number of consecutive base pairs will be plotted as points. The default is 1; that is, to plot every base pair within a user selected energy increment from the minimum.
The user is then prompted for the ``window size''. This parameter
can also be regarded as 1 less than the minimum ``distance'' between
any two predicted foldings [23]. When a base pair has been
selected from the screen and an (otherwise) optimal structure
containing that base pair has been computed, the program marks all
the base pairs in the computed structure as well as any base pairs
that are within a ``window size'' distance from these base
pairs.
In an RNA molecule ri ,ri+1 ,
... ,rn, the distance between two base pairs
ri-rj and
ri′-rj′ is defined to be
max{|i-i′|,|j-j′|}
When the energy dot plot is redrawn, the marked base pairs do not
appear. This gives the user a chance to select a base pair that is
not ``too close'' to any base pairs that have already occurred in
computed foldings. In addition, subsequent computed foldings will
not be output unless they contain at least ``window size'' unmarked
base pairs. The choice of the window parameter is discussed in
3.5. If one's aim is merely to look at the dot plot and see which
structural features are ``well defined'', with few competing
structures, then the value of this parameter is irrelevant.
In a continuation run, program execution continues with input save file name selection (3.7). Otherwise, in a regular run, program execution continues with sequence file name selection (3.6).
Michael Zuker
Thu Nov 2 14:28:14 CST 1995